wiener

listen to the pronunciation of wiener
English - English
penis
a frankfurter
a sausage made from beef, chicken or pork, also a hot dog
an irritating or disliked person
someone who is nervous or afraid to partake in certain activities
Wiener Kreis Wiener Werkstätte Wiener Norbert
{i} family name; Norbert Wiener (1894-1964), American mathematician who founded the science of cybernetics
(colloquial) penis
a smooth-textured sausage of minced beef or pork usually smoked; often served on a bread roll
{i} frankfurter, small smoked sausage containing beef or a combination of beef and pork
United States mathematician and founder of cybernetics (1894-1964)
Wiener schnitzel
A veal cutlet dipped into flour, egg and breadcrumbs, then fried
wiener breath
a person who smells
wiener breath
an annoying person
wiener dogs
plural form of wiener dog
wiener roast
An activity in which people use a ground fire (e.g., a campfire) to cook hot dogs

The campers decided to have a wiener roast before singing songs around the campfire.

wiener roasts
plural form of wiener roast
Wiener Werkstätte
English Vienna Workshops Cooperative enterprise for crafts and design founded in Vienna in 1903. Inspired by William Morris and the English Arts and Crafts Movement, it was founded by Koloman Moser and Josef Hoffmann with the goal of restoring the values of handcraftsmanship to an industrial society in which such crafts were dying. Its members had close ties to the artists of the Vienna Sezession and the Art Nouveau movement. The Wiener Werkstätte's work in jewelry, furnishings, interior design, fashion, and other areas, which often celebrated the beauty of geometry, became widely known for elegance and innovation, and this "square style" influenced the work of the Bauhaus craftsmen in the 1920s as well as the work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Wiener schnitzel
breaded veal cutlet
wiener roast
a cookout where roasted frankfurters are the main course
wiener schnitzel
A veal cutlet variously seasoned garnished, often with lemon, sardines, and capers
Norbert Wiener
{i} (1894-1964) American mathematician who founded the science of cybernetics
Norbert Wiener
He joined the faculty of MIT in 1919. His work on generalized harmonic analysis and Tauberian theorems (which deduce the convergence of an infinite series) won the American Mathematical Society's Bôcher Prize in 1933. The origin of cybernetics as an independent science is generally dated from the 1948 publication of his Cybernetics. He made contributions to such areas as stochastic processes, quantum theory, and, during World War II, gunfire control. Crater Wiener on the Moon is named for him
Norbert Wiener
born Nov. 26, 1894, Columbia, Mo., U.S. died March 18, 1964, Stockholm, Swed. U.S. mathematician. He earned a Ph.D. from Harvard at
wieners
plural of wiener
wiener

    Hyphenation

    Wie·ner

    Turkish pronunciation

    waynır

    Pronunciation

    /ˈwīnər/ /ˈwaɪnɜr/

    Etymology

    () From German wienerwurst, from wiener (“of Vienna, Viennese”) + wurst (“sausage”), because sausages were originally made in Vienna, Austria. Nowadays, in Germany this sausage is known as Wiener Würstchen (“small sausage from Vienna”), but in Vienna it is called a Frankfurter (“from Frankfurt”)''.

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